Jung, Winnicott e a psique cindida

Autores

  • Norcirio Queiroz UFPR
  • Mark Saban Universidade de Essex

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21901/2448-3060/self-2024.vol9.213

Palavras-chave:

Winnicott, dissociação, Myers, Flournoy, Janet, Psique multipla

Resumo

Em sua resenha de “Memories Dreams Reflections”, Winnicott diagnosticou Jung como sofrendo de uma cisão psíquica e caracterizou o conteúdo e a estrutura da psicologia analítica como moldados e condicionados principalmente pela busca defensiva de Jung por um “self que ele pudesse chamar de seu”. Esta análise patologizante continua a ser endossada por escritores junguianos contemporâneos. Neste artigo tento mostrar que a crítica de Winnicott é fundamentalmente equivocada, pois deriva de um modelo psicanalítico da psique, um modelo que considera toda dissociação como necessariamente patológica. Argumento que a compreensão de Jung sobre a psique difere radicalmente deste modelo e, além disso, que corresponde, em geral, ao tipo de modelo dissociativo que encontramos nos escritos de Frederic Myers, William James e Theodor Flournoy. Concluo que uma relação fecunda entre Psicanálise e Psicologia Analítica depende da consciência dessas importantes diferenças entre os dois modelos psíquicos.

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Biografia do Autor

Norcirio Queiroz, UFPR

Norcirio Queiroz - mestre em Psicologia pela UFAM, doutorando em Psicologia pelo PPGPSI na linha de pesquisa Psicologia Clínica pela UFPR

Mark Saban, Universidade de Essex

Mark Saban - PhD pela University of Essex, professor da University of Essex no Departamento de estudos Psicossociais e Psicanalíticos

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Publicado

26-08-2024

Como Citar

Queiroz, N., & Saban, M. (2024). Jung, Winnicott e a psique cindida. Self - Revista Do Instituto Junguiano De São Paulo, 9, e006. https://doi.org/10.21901/2448-3060/self-2024.vol9.213

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